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Short Description: A practical, official-source guide to South Korea’s D-4-6 General Trainee (Private Institute) visa: eligibility, documents, work limits, extensions, and risks.
Last Verified On: 2026-04-07
Visa Snapshot
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Country | South Korea |
| Visa name | General Trainee (Private Institute) Visa |
| Visa short name | D-4-6 |
| Category | Long-stay training / study-related status |
| Main purpose | Training or education at a private institute in South Korea under the D-4 training framework |
| Typical applicant | Foreign nationals attending non-degree training or educational programs at eligible private institutes |
| Validity | Varies by issuance and consulate; verify on visa grant |
| Stay duration | Usually tied to the approved training period, subject to immigration approval |
| Entries allowed | Single or multiple entry may vary by visa issuance |
| Extension possible? | Yes, in many cases, if training continues and requirements are maintained |
| Work allowed? | Limited/usually restricted; separate permission rules may apply and should be verified with immigration |
| Study allowed? | Yes, for the approved training program |
| Family allowed? | Not typically the main feature of this status; dependent options may be limited or unavailable depending on circumstances |
| PR path? | Indirect only; D-4 itself is generally not a direct PR route |
| Citizenship path? | Indirect only; usually requires later qualification under another long-term residence pathway |
The South Korea D-4-6 visa is a subcategory of the D-4 General Trainee status. It is used for foreign nationals who will receive training or education at a private institute in South Korea rather than a university degree program.
In plain English, this is a long-stay training visa. It is not a tourist visa, not a work visa, and not the standard university student visa.
What this visa is for
This visa exists to let eligible foreigners stay in South Korea for structured training at certain institutions. In practice, D-4 categories are used for non-degree educational or training activities, including Korean language study or other training streams, depending on the exact subcategory.
For D-4-6, the key concept is: – training at a private institute – under the D-4 framework – for a purpose approved by Korean immigration
How it fits into South Korea’s immigration system
South Korea uses immigration “status of stay” categories. The D-4 is one of the long-term stay categories. A person usually: 1. gets visa issuance approval or applies at a consulate, 2. enters Korea, 3. and, if staying long-term, completes local registration obligations.
So this is both: – a visa for entry, and – a status of stay once admitted for the approved purpose.
Official naming and language
Common naming used in English: – General Trainee – D-4 – D-4-6 General Trainee (Private Institute)
Relevant Korean naming may appear in immigration systems as: – 일반연수 (General Trainee) – D-4-6 as a subcode
Warning: South Korean visa naming is sometimes translated inconsistently across embassy pages and civil-service portals. Some official pages list only the main D-4 category and not every sub-stream in one place. Where D-4-6 is not separately explained online, applicants should confirm directly with the Korean embassy/consulate or Hi Korea.
2. Who should apply for this visa?
Ideal applicants
This visa is generally suitable for: – people attending a legitimate private training institute in South Korea – applicants in structured non-degree training – people whose main purpose is education/training, not employment – applicants able to prove tuition, finances, and a genuine study/training purpose
Who this visa may suit
Students
Yes, if the program is a qualifying private-institute training course rather than a university degree.
Professionals seeking skill training
Possibly, if the training is formal, documented, and fits D-4-6 rules.
Career changers
Possibly, but they must still prove the training is genuine and coherent.
Young adults preparing for future study
Possibly, especially if the private institute training is a clear stepping stone.
Who should usually not use this visa
Tourists
Do not use D-4-6 for sightseeing. Consider: – visa-free entry if eligible, or – a short-stay visitor route, if required
Business visitors
For short meetings, conferences, or negotiations, this is usually the wrong category. Consider a business/short-stay route.
Job seekers
D-4-6 is not a job-seeking visa. A different status would be needed.
Employees
If your real purpose is work, use the proper work visa/status. Do not use D-4-6 to enter and then work unlawfully.
University degree students
Usually use: – D-2 for degree study
Korean language trainees at university language institutes
Often a different D-4 subcategory may apply, commonly D-4-1 rather than D-4-6.
Spouses/partners and children joining someone in Korea
D-4-6 is not the normal family-reunion route.
Digital nomads / remote workers
This is not designed as a remote-work visa.
Founders/investors
This is not a business setup or investor route.
Medical travelers
Use the appropriate medical entry route if applicable.
Transit passengers
Use transit rules, not D-4-6.
3. What is this visa used for?
Permitted purpose
The core permitted purpose is: – participation in an approved private-institute training or educational program in South Korea
Depending on the institute and approval: – classroom-based learning – formal training modules – institute-supervised attendance – curriculum participation for the authorized period
Usually prohibited or restricted
Tourism
Incidental tourism may be possible during your stay, but tourism is not the primary purpose of the visa.
Meetings
Ordinary business meetings are not the main purpose of D-4-6.
Employment
Generally prohibited unless specific separate permission exists.
Remote work
Not clearly authorized by D-4-6 rules as a general matter. This is a grey area and should not be assumed to be allowed.
Internship
Only if specifically permitted under Korean immigration rules and linked to the authorized status. Do not assume.
Volunteering
Some volunteering can count as unauthorized work if it resembles labor. Verify first.
Paid performance
Generally not permitted unless separately authorized.
Journalism
Not the correct category.
Medical treatment
Not the main purpose of this visa.
Transit
Not applicable.
Marriage
You may marry while in Korea if legally permitted, but D-4-6 is not a marriage visa.
Religious activity
Not the correct category.
Long-term residence
Only for the training period; this is not a general residence route.
Family reunion
Not the main use of this visa.
Investment/business setup
Not the correct category.
Common Mistake: People often assume “study visa” means any educational activity allows work, freelance income, or side business. That is not safe. On D-4-6, your rights are tied narrowly to the approved training purpose.
4. Official visa classification and naming
Official program name
- General Trainee
Code
- D-4
- Subcategory: D-4-6
Long name
- General Trainee (Private Institute)
Related categories people confuse it with
| Visa/Status | What it is | Key difference from D-4-6 |
|---|---|---|
| D-2 | Degree study | For university/college degree students |
| D-4-1 | Korean language trainee | Commonly for Korean-language study at university-affiliated institutions |
| D-4 other streams | Other non-degree training | Different sub-purposes under the D-4 umbrella |
| C-3 | Short-term visit | Not for long-term structured training |
| D-10 | Job seeker | Not for study/training |
| E-series | Work statuses | For authorized employment, not study/training |
Old vs current naming
There is no clear public indication that D-4-6 has been abolished, but online presentation of subcodes may differ across official sites. Some official portals give broader D-4 guidance rather than a detailed page for each subcode.
5. Eligibility criteria
Because D-4-6 details are not always published in one single embassy page, applicants should treat the following as a combination of official D-4 practice and subcategory-specific caution.
Core eligibility
You generally need: – a valid passport – admission or registration at a qualifying private institute – a genuine training purpose – evidence of funds for tuition and living costs – documents required by the embassy/consulate and immigration – no serious immigration, criminal, or security issue
Nationality rules
Nationality affects: – whether you need a visa before travel – where you can apply – whether additional scrutiny applies – document legalization rules – whether tuberculosis or other medical checks are required by a specific mission
These vary by embassy and nationality.
Passport validity
Your passport should be valid well beyond the intended stay. Some missions require at least 6 months validity; verify locally.
Age
No universal public age rule specific to D-4-6 is consistently published on every official page. Minors may face extra consent/document requirements.
Education
Usually relevant if needed to support the training logic, but not always a fixed threshold.
Language
No universal publicly stated Korean-language minimum is consistently listed for D-4-6. Institutes may impose their own standards.
Work experience
Not usually the main criterion unless the training program expects it.
Sponsorship / invitation
You generally need: – admission/registration proof from the private institute – sometimes business registration or institute-related supporting documents from the host institution
Job offer
Not required for this visa.
Points requirement
Not applicable.
Relationship proof
Only relevant if applying with family, if allowed.
Admission letter
Usually essential.
Maintenance funds
Yes. You should expect to show sufficient financial capacity for: – tuition – housing – living costs – return or onward travel, where requested
Accommodation proof
May be requested depending on post/consulate or immigration stage.
Onward travel
Sometimes requested, especially for visa issuance review or border questioning.
Health
Some applicants may need health checks depending on nationality, local mission policy, or length/purpose of stay.
Character / criminal record
A criminal background issue may affect approval. A police certificate may or may not be requested depending on the mission and case.
Insurance
Not always clearly listed as a pre-visa requirement for every D-4-6 applicant, but health insurance and later national insurance obligations may become relevant after arrival.
Biometrics
Consulate-specific and nationality-specific. Some missions collect biometric information.
Intent requirements
You must show genuine training intent. If officers think your real purpose is work or long-term settlement without the right status, refusal risk rises.
Return intent vs dual intent
South Korea does not frame this exactly like some common-law countries. But applicants still need to show lawful, temporary training purpose.
Residency outside Korea
Many consulates require you to apply from: – your country of nationality, or – your legal country of residence
Local registration rules
If staying long enough, foreigner registration after arrival is generally required.
Quotas/caps/ballots
No public lottery or points-based cap is generally associated with D-4-6.
Embassy-specific rules
Very important. Required documents can differ by: – embassy – consulate – nationality – whether you apply via visa issuance number or direct mission review
Special exemptions
None clearly and universally published for D-4-6 beyond standard diplomatic or procedural exceptions.
6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers
Ineligibility factors
You may be refused if: – the institute is not eligible or documents are not credible – your financial proof is weak – your purpose appears inconsistent – your records suggest unauthorized work intent – you have prior overstay, deportation, or serious immigration violations – your passport is invalid or damaged – required forms or translations are missing
Common red flags
- admission letter does not match application narrative
- large unexplained recent bank deposits
- missing tuition evidence
- poor explanation of why training is needed
- forged or unverifiable certificates
- inconsistent education/work timeline
- weak ties to home country when questioned
- prior visa refusals not disclosed honestly
- applying for D-4-6 when a work or degree-study route is obviously more appropriate
Interview-related problems
If interviewed, applicants can hurt their case by: – giving vague answers about the institute – not knowing the course details – describing plans to work instead of train – saying they will “find something to do” after arrival – contradicting written documents
7. Benefits of this visa
Main benefits
- lawful stay in South Korea for approved training
- ability to attend the authorized private institute program
- possibility of extension if the course continues and conditions are met
- possible later conversion to another status if legally eligible
- a structured route into Korean educational/training systems
Practical benefits
- longer stay than short-term visitor options
- better legal stability for training than trying to use tourist status
- may help future transitions into degree study or another lawful status, depending on circumstances
Family benefits
Very limited compared with some work or higher-study visas. Dependents are not a headline benefit of this route.
Travel flexibility
If multiple entry is granted or later secured, travel can be easier. But this varies.
Long-term residence benefit
Indirect only. D-4-6 is generally a stepping-stone, not an end-state residence category.
8. Limitations and restrictions
Key restrictions
- no free general employment right
- stay tied to the approved training purpose
- attendance/compliance with institute program is important
- status may be lost or extension refused if studies/training end
- address and registration obligations apply
- possible limits on switching or part-time activity without permission
Reporting obligations
You may need to report: – address changes – passport changes – school/institute changes – status changes
Sponsor dependence
Your visa basis depends heavily on the institute and your active enrollment.
Re-entry limitations
If you leave Korea, re-entry may depend on: – your visa validity – your registered status – current re-entry rules
Always check before travel.
9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules
Visa validity
This varies by issuance. The visa sticker or visa grant notice may show: – a validity period to enter Korea by a certain date – number of entries – the initial period of stay
Allowed duration of stay
Usually linked to: – the course length – immigration approval – supporting documents from the institute
Single vs multiple entry
Either may be possible depending on issuance and current policy.
When the clock starts
Two timelines matter: 1. visa validity: when you must enter Korea 2. period of stay: usually starts from entry/admission
Overstay consequences
Overstaying can lead to: – fines – visa problems – future refusals – possible removal measures
Renewal timing
Apply early enough before expiry. For Korea, last-minute applications can create risk. Check current Hi Korea guidance.
Grace periods
Do not assume any grace period exists.
Bridging/interim status
Korea does not generally use the same “bridging visa” terminology as some countries. If an extension/change application is filed properly, the case should be handled under Korean immigration procedure, but applicants should verify current status effect directly with immigration.
10. Complete document checklist
Warning: Exact D-4-6 document lists vary by embassy, nationality, and whether you use a visa issuance number. Always use your specific embassy/consulate checklist first.
A. Core documents
| Document | What it is | Why needed | Common mistakes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Visa application form | Official application form | Starts the visa request | Old form version, missing signature |
| Passport | Valid travel document | Identity and travel eligibility | Expired soon, damaged pages |
| Passport photo | Recent photo | Identity matching | Wrong size/background |
| Admission or enrollment certificate | Proof from private institute | Confirms training purpose | Missing dates, no seal/signature |
| Training plan / course details | Curriculum or schedule | Shows program legitimacy | Vague course description |
B. Identity/travel documents
- passport biodata page copy
- previous passports if requested
- residence permit for third-country applicants
- legal stay proof in country of application
C. Financial documents
- bank statements
- sponsor support documents if applicable
- tuition payment receipt if available
- scholarship/support letter if applicable
Common mistakes: – sudden unexplained deposits – statements too short – online screenshots without official markings where originals are required
D. Employment/business documents
If relevant to show background or sponsor support: – employer letter – leave approval – salary slips – business registration documents
E. Education documents
If requested: – transcripts – diplomas – language records – current student status documents
F. Relationship/family documents
If applying with family or under sponsorship: – marriage certificate – birth certificates – proof of parental authority – consent letter for minors
G. Accommodation/travel documents
Possibly required: – housing confirmation – dormitory letter – lease copy – temporary booking details – flight itinerary, if requested
H. Sponsor/invitation documents
From the institute or sponsor, where required: – invitation letter – certificate of business registration – proof of institutional authorization – identity documents of responsible official if requested
I. Health/insurance documents
If required by your embassy or category: – medical certificate – TB test certificate – insurance evidence
J. Country-specific extras
Some embassies request: – criminal record certificate – apostilled education records – parental bank statements – local residence proof – document legalization
K. Minor/dependent-specific documents
- birth certificate
- notarized parental consent
- custody documents
- passport copies of both parents
- school-related records if relevant
L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs
These vary widely by embassy and document type. Some documents may need: – Korean or English translation – notarization – apostille – consular legalization
Do not assume a plain translation is enough.
M. Photo specifications
Use the exact official mission instructions. Typical issues: – wrong dimensions – heavy retouching – old photo – shadowed background
11. Financial requirements
This is one of the least consistently published parts of D-4-6 across official public pages.
What is officially clear
You generally must show the ability to cover: – tuition – living expenses – possibly accommodation and return travel
What is not uniformly public
A single nationwide publicly stated minimum balance specifically for D-4-6 is not always clearly published on all official pages.
So applicants should: – check their embassy’s current D-4 checklist – confirm with the institute – verify current Hi Korea or mission guidance
Who can sponsor
Potentially: – the applicant – parents – a legal guardian – in some cases another sponsor, if accepted and documented
Acceptable proof
Usually: – recent bank statements – bank balance certificate – scholarship/support evidence – tuition payment proof – sponsor relationship proof if sponsor funds are used
Proof strength tips
Stronger cases usually show: – stable account history – realistic balances – no suspicious cash inflow – clear link between sponsor and applicant – tuition already paid or reserved, where possible
Hidden costs
Many applicants budget only for tuition and forget: – housing deposit – immigration fees – ARC/registration-related costs – translation/legalization – health checks – flights – initial living setup
12. Fees and total cost
Warning: Korean visa fees vary by visa type, reciprocity, nationality, and entry count. Embassy fees also change. Always check the latest official fee page.
Main cost categories
| Cost item | Notes |
|---|---|
| Visa application fee | Varies by nationality, mission, and single/multiple entry |
| Visa issuance number process | If used, institutional/immigration procedures may apply |
| Biometrics fee | If applicable at your mission |
| Medical exam fee | If required |
| Police certificate cost | If required in your country |
| Translation/notarization/apostille | Often significant |
| Courier/service center fee | If used |
| Insurance cost | May arise before or after arrival |
| Travel cost | Flight and relocation costs |
| Housing cost | Deposit, rent, dorm fee |
| Extension/change fee | If later applying in Korea |
| Dependent fee | Separate if family applications are allowed/used |
Typical structure
Korean missions commonly charge based on: – single-entry visa – double-entry visa – multiple-entry visa
Exact current amounts should be checked on the embassy/consulate page serving your location.
13. Step-by-step application process
1. Confirm the correct visa
Make sure your course is truly a D-4-6 private institute training case, not D-2 or another D-4 stream.
2. Get admitted to the institute
Secure: – enrollment/admission letter – course details – payment documents – sponsor/institute documents required for visa support
3. Check your embassy or consulate rules
Look for: – application form version – whether reservation is required – whether a visa issuance number is used – original vs copy rules – legalization rules
4. Gather documents
Prepare identity, finance, institute, and supporting records.
5. Complete the application form
Use the official Korean visa form and match all details exactly to your passport and institute records.
6. Pay fees
Payment method varies: – cash – money order – bank deposit – card depending on mission.
7. Book submission / biometrics / interview
If required by your mission.
8. Submit application
This may be: – directly at the embassy/consulate – through a designated visa application center – through an approved travel/document channel in limited jurisdictions
9. Respond to document requests
The mission may ask for: – clearer bank proof – updated admission papers – sponsor explanation – legalized documents
10. Receive decision
If approved, you may receive: – visa sticker in passport, or – confirmation linked to a visa issuance system
11. Travel to Korea
Carry key supporting documents on arrival.
12. Post-arrival registration
If your stay requires it, apply for foreigner registration/Residence Card under current rules.
13. Maintain status
Attend the program, keep your address updated, and avoid unauthorized work.
14. Processing time
Official standard times
No single universal processing time applies worldwide. It varies by: – embassy/consulate – nationality – season – background checks – whether documents are complete
Practical expectations
A simple case may move relatively quickly, but delays are common when: – the institute documents need verification – legalization is questioned – funding is weak – the applicant is from a higher-scrutiny jurisdiction
Priority options
Not all missions offer expedited handling.
Seasonal delays
Expect slower processing: – before semester/training intakes – during holiday periods – during high student visa demand windows
15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks
Biometrics
May be required depending on mission and applicant profile.
Interview
Not every applicant is interviewed. If called, expect questions on: – why this institute – course details – funding – post-training plans – prior travel or visa history
Medical
May be required in some cases, especially if mission-specific health screening applies.
Police checks
Not universally required for every D-4-6 applicant, but can be requested.
Validity
If police or medical certificates are required, they often have limited validity windows. Use fresh documents unless the mission says otherwise.
16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality
Official approval data
Public official approval-rate data specifically for D-4-6 is not readily available in one standard source.
Practical refusal patterns
Most refusals appear tied to: – weak or unclear study purpose – poor financial proof – inconsistent personal timeline – suspect institute documents – trying to use a training visa for hidden work intent – incomplete legalized documentation where required
17. How to strengthen the application legally
Show a coherent story
Your application should make sense from start to finish: – current background – why this training – why this institute – how you will pay – what you plan to do afterward
Improve financial clarity
Include: – bank statements with stable balances – explanation for large deposits – sponsor letter with relationship proof – tuition payment evidence if available
Strengthen institute evidence
Ask the institute for: – detailed curriculum – exact start/end dates – registration certificate – contact details – tuition invoice/receipt
Use a short cover letter
Explain: – your goals – why Korea – why this private institute – your funding – your compliance intentions
Be precise
Match: – names – dates – passport numbers – course dates across all documents.
Translate properly
If translation is required, use the correct certified/notarized format.
18. Insider tips, practical hacks, and smart applicant strategies
Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies
Apply after the institute pack is complete
Do not rush to apply with a weak or half-prepared institute letter.
Use a document index
A one-page index makes review easier: 1. application form 2. passport 3. photo 4. admission letter 5. course details 6. tuition proof 7. bank statements 8. sponsor documents 9. translations/legalizations
Explain large deposits proactively
If your account recently received a large amount: – attach a brief explanation – include source evidence – do not wait for the embassy to guess
Keep your narrative narrow
Do not clutter the case with unrelated plans such as: – “I may work part time somehow” – “I might start a business later” – “I want to settle permanently” Focus on the approved training purpose.
Use the embassy checklist and your institute checklist together
They often differ. The safest approach is to satisfy both.
Carry originals to submission if possible
Even if copies are submitted, some missions may want to inspect originals.
Contact the embassy only when necessary
Good reasons: – your checklist is unclear – your nationality has special rules – your legal residence in a third country is unusual Avoid repeated status-chasing emails too early.
19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance
When needed
A cover letter is not always mandatory, but it is often useful.
What to include
- who you are
- what program you will attend
- why the institute is relevant
- how long you will stay
- how you will fund the stay
- confirmation that you understand status limits
- what you plan to do after training
What not to say
- vague claims like “I love Korea”
- plans for unauthorized work
- inconsistent immigration intentions
- unsupported career promises
Sample outline
- Introduction and purpose
- Training program details
- Academic/professional background
- Why this training matters
- Funding summary
- Compliance and future plans
20. Sponsor / inviter guidance
Who can sponsor
Depending on the case: – the private institute as host/inviter – the applicant personally – parents or guardians financially – another accepted financial sponsor if mission rules allow
Institute documents often needed
- admission letter
- course registration certificate
- business registration or institutional proof
- tuition statement
- invitation/explanation letter where required
Sponsor mistakes
- unclear relationship to applicant
- weak financial evidence
- generic invitation letters
- no contact details
- mismatch between sponsor letter and bank records
21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children
Are dependents allowed?
This is not a prominently family-oriented category. Dependent eligibility for D-4-6 holders is limited and not always clearly presented in public guidance.
Practical reality
In many cases, applicants should not assume they can easily bring spouse or children under dependent status linked to D-4-6.
If attempting family accompaniment
You may need to verify: – whether a dependent status is available for your exact D-4-6 circumstances – financial thresholds – relationship proof – school-age child arrangements – separate application procedures
Partner definition
South Korean immigration generally relies on legally recognized family relationships. Unmarried partner recognition is limited compared with some countries.
Same-sex spouses/partners
This area can be especially sensitive and may not be clearly recognized in the same way as opposite-sex marriages for immigration purposes. Verify directly with immigration and the relevant mission.
22. Work rights, study rights, and business activity rules
Study rights
Yes, for the approved training program.
Work rights
Generally restricted. Do not assume open work rights.
Part-time work
Some foreign students/trainees in Korea may obtain limited permission for part-time activity under separate rules, but whether this applies to D-4-6 specifically, and under what conditions, must be checked with immigration.
Self-employment
Not authorized unless explicitly permitted under another status.
Remote work
Not clearly authorized under D-4-6. Risky area.
Internships
Only if specifically permitted and aligned with status rules.
Volunteering
Can become unauthorized work if it replaces paid labor.
Side income
Do not assume allowed.
Passive income
Investment income from abroad is a different issue from working in Korea, but tax and reporting consequences may still arise.
Business meetings
Not the core purpose of this status.
Receiving payment in Korea
Usually not allowed unless the activity is authorized.
23. Travel rules and border entry issues
Visa is not final admission
Even with a valid visa, final entry is decided at the border.
What to carry
Bring: – passport – visa or visa issuance confirmation – admission/enrollment letter – institute contact details – accommodation details – evidence of funds – return/onward plan if available
Border questions may include
- why are you coming to Korea?
- what course will you study?
- where will you stay?
- who is paying?
Re-entry after travel
Check: – whether your visa/status supports re-entry – whether your registration card status affects travel – any current re-entry requirements
New passport issue
If your passport changes, verify how to link your Korean status/visa to the new passport before travel.
24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion
Can it be extended?
Often yes, if: – the training continues – attendance/compliance is satisfactory – finances remain sufficient – immigration approves
Inside-country renewal
Usually handled in Korea through immigration if eligible.
Switching to another visa
Possible in some cases, but not automatic. For example: – D-4 to D-2 if moving into qualifying degree study – D-4 to other statuses if full legal requirements are met
Changing institute
This can be sensitive. You may need prior immigration approval or reporting.
Restoration after expiry
Do not rely on restoration. Late action can cause serious problems.
Key deadline rule
Apply before your current period of stay expires.
25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway
Does D-4-6 count directly toward PR?
Generally, no direct PR route is built into D-4-6 itself.
Indirect pathway
It may help indirectly if you later move to: – degree study – qualifying employment – another long-term residence status
Citizenship pathway
Also indirect only. Naturalization in Korea usually depends on later residence type, residence duration, integration factors, and legal eligibility.
When D-4-6 does not help much
If you remain only on temporary training status without transitioning to a qualifying long-term residence category, it usually does not serve as a practical PR route.
26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations
Registration obligations
Long-stay foreign nationals generally must complete foreigner registration within the required period after arrival.
Address updates
You usually must report address changes.
Attendance and status compliance
Poor attendance or dropping out can affect: – visa extensions – current status validity – future applications
Tax issues
If you earn income in Korea without authorization, that creates both immigration and tax risk.
Health insurance
Rules may apply after registration and length of stay. Verify current National Health Insurance obligations.
Overstay and status violation
These can lead to: – fines – cancellation – future visa refusals
27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions
Visa waivers
Visa-free entry rules do not replace the need for the proper long-stay training visa if your purpose is D-4-6 study/training.
Special passport exemptions
Diplomatic/official passports may follow different rules.
Bilateral agreements
Some reciprocity arrangements affect: – visa fees – documentary burden – visa issuance practice
Higher-scrutiny nationalities
Some missions may impose extra document or interview requirements by nationality. This is mission-specific and not always publicly detailed.
28. Special cases and edge cases
Minors
Need extra consent/custody documents.
Divorced or separated parents
Provide: – custody orders – consent from non-traveling parent where required
Adopted children
Adoption proof may be needed.
Same-sex spouses/partners
Recognition issues may arise; verify directly.
Stateless persons / refugees
Case handling may be more complex and often mission-specific.
Dual nationals
Use the passport you will apply and travel with consistently.
Prior refusals
Disclose honestly and explain what changed.
Overstays
Past overstays can seriously weaken the case.
Criminal records
May trigger refusal or deeper review.
Urgent travel
Expedited handling is not guaranteed.
Expired passport with valid visa
Do not assume travel is possible without formal guidance; check with the mission.
Applying from a third country
Usually possible only if you are lawfully resident there.
Name change / gender marker mismatch
Provide legal proof and consistent translation.
Military service records
May be relevant for some nationalities if requested.
Previous deportation/removal
High-risk case; legal advice may be appropriate.
29. Common myths and mistakes
Myth vs Fact
| Myth | Fact |
|---|---|
| “D-4-6 is basically a tourist visa for long stays.” | False. It is a training/status-based long-stay category tied to a specific purpose. |
| “Any private school in Korea can sponsor D-4-6.” | Not necessarily. The institute must fit immigration requirements. |
| “I can work freely because I’m studying.” | False. Work rights are restricted and may require separate permission. |
| “A big bank balance one day before applying is enough.” | Not always. Officers may examine source and stability of funds. |
| “If I enter Korea, my visa can’t be questioned.” | False. Border officers still decide admission. |
| “I can switch to any visa after arrival.” | False. Switching depends on legal eligibility and immigration discretion. |
30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication
After refusal
You should receive a refusal outcome, though the detail level can vary.
Appeal / review
Formal appeal or reconsideration availability depends on the refusal type and the procedure used. Public guidance is not always detailed for every overseas visa refusal category.
Reapplication
Often the practical route is to reapply after fixing the problem: – stronger funds – correct legalizations – better institute documents – clearer explanation of purpose
Refunds
Visa fees are generally non-refundable after processing begins.
When to reapply
Only after the refusal reason is genuinely addressed.
Legal help
Consider legal advice if: – you have immigration violations – criminal issues exist – there was suspected document fraud by a third party – you have repeated refusals
31. Arrival in South Korea: what happens next?
At immigration
An officer may ask for: – your institute details – your address – proof of onward plans or support
After entry
If you are staying long-term, expect to: – obtain foreigner registration/Residence Card if required – register your address – keep your contact information updated
First 30–90 days
Typical priorities: – move into housing – complete registration formalities – begin attending the program – set up bank/SIM only after you have the required ID documents, if needed
Health insurance
Check current post-arrival insurance obligations based on your stay length and registration status.
32. Real-world timeline examples
Example 1: Solo trainee
- Week 1–3: choose institute, receive admission
- Week 3–5: gather finance and identity documents
- Week 5: submit visa
- Week 6–10: visa processing
- Week 10–12: travel and register after arrival
Example 2: Applicant with sponsor funds
- Week 1–2: secure sponsor affidavit and bank records
- Week 2–4: obtain institute packet
- Week 4–6: notarize/translate documents
- Week 6: submit
- Week 7–11: respond to document request
- Week 12: decision and travel
Example 3: Applicant switching later to degree study
- Initial D-4-6 period for training
- During stay: prepare D-2 admission
- Before D-4 stay expiry: apply for change/extension if eligible
33. Ideal document pack structure
Recommended order
- Cover page / index
- Visa application form
- Passport copy
- Photo
- Admission/enrollment letter
- Course details
- Tuition payment proof
- Financial documents
- Sponsor documents
- Education/work background documents
- Accommodation proof
- Translations/legalizations
- Cover letter
File naming convention
- 01_Application_Form.pdf
- 02_Passport.pdf
- 03_Admission_Letter.pdf
- 04_Course_Schedule.pdf
- 05_Bank_Statements.pdf
Scan tips
- color scans
- full page visible
- no cut-off corners
- one PDF per section unless told otherwise
34. Exact checklists
Pre-application checklist
- confirmed D-4-6 is the right category
- institute is eligible
- passport valid
- funds ready
- translations complete
- legalization checked
- embassy-specific list checked
Submission-day checklist
- application signed
- photo attached
- originals and copies packed
- payment method confirmed
- appointment confirmation printed/saved
Biometrics/interview-day checklist
- passport
- appointment proof
- original institute letter
- financial originals
- concise explanation of study plan
Arrival checklist
- passport and visa
- institute contact info
- housing address
- required registration timeline noted
Extension/renewal checklist
- attendance proof
- continued enrollment
- updated finances
- updated address
- application before expiry
Refusal recovery checklist
- read refusal reason carefully
- identify missing or weak evidence
- replace unclear documents
- explain changed circumstances
- reapply only when genuinely stronger
35. FAQs
1. Is D-4-6 the same as a university student visa?
No. University degree study usually falls under D-2.
2. Is D-4-6 the same as Korean language study?
Not necessarily. Many Korean language students use another D-4 subcategory, often D-4-1.
3. Can I work part-time on D-4-6?
Do not assume yes. Check current immigration permission rules for your exact status.
4. Can I freelance online for foreign clients?
This is not clearly authorized and may create immigration risk.
5. Do I need to show a minimum bank balance?
Usually yes in substance, but the exact amount may vary by mission and case.
6. Can my parents sponsor me?
Often yes, if the mission accepts parental sponsorship and the relationship is proven.
7. Do I need to pay full tuition before applying?
Not always, but proof of payment or invoice can strengthen the case.
8. Can I apply from a country where I am only visiting?
Usually not; lawful residence there is often required.
9. Do I need a police certificate?
Maybe. It depends on the mission and case.
10. Is an interview always required?
No.
11. How long does processing take?
It varies widely by embassy, season, and document quality.
12. Can my spouse come with me?
Do not assume. Family accompaniment options are limited and case-specific.
13. Can my child study in Korea if I hold D-4-6?
This may require separate status analysis.
14. Can I change from D-4-6 to D-2 later?
Possibly, if you gain admission to a qualifying degree program and meet immigration rules.
15. What if I change institutes?
You may need immigration approval or reporting before or after the change.
16. Will visa-free entry help me start the course and change status later?
Do not assume this is allowed or practical. For long-term training, the proper visa should usually be obtained.
17. Is a cover letter necessary?
Not always, but often helpful.
18. What if my bank statement has one large recent deposit?
Explain it with evidence.
19. Can I use a joint bank account?
Possibly, but ownership and access must be clear.
20. Does prior travel history matter?
It can, but a lack of travel history is not automatically fatal.
21. What if I previously overstayed in another country?
Disclose truthfully if asked; it may affect review.
22. Can I stay in Korea after my course ends?
Only if you obtain another lawful status or extension.
23. Do I need health insurance before applying?
Maybe not always before visa issuance, but insurance obligations after arrival may still apply.
24. Is the visa single-entry or multiple-entry?
Either may be possible depending on issuance.
25. Can I travel outside Korea during my program?
Maybe, but verify re-entry implications before leaving.
26. What happens if I stop attending classes?
Your status can be jeopardized.
27. Can a private tutor or small academy sponsor D-4-6?
Only if it qualifies under immigration rules. Do not assume all private providers are eligible.
28. What if my passport expires soon after arrival?
Renew early and ask how to update your Korean immigration records.
29. Can I bring an unmarried partner?
Usually difficult unless recognized under Korean immigration rules.
30. Can I appeal a refusal?
Sometimes review options are limited; often reapplication after fixing issues is the practical path.
36. Official sources and verification
Below are official sources relevant to South Korean visas, immigration status, and overseas visa processing. Because D-4-6 subcategory pages are not always centralized in one public page, applicants should cross-check the exact subcategory with the mission handling their case.
- Korea Visa Portal: https://www.visa.go.kr/
- Hi Korea e-Government for Foreigners: https://www.hikorea.go.kr/
- Ministry of Justice, Republic of Korea: https://www.moj.go.kr/
- Overseas Korean missions portal (Ministry of Foreign Affairs): https://www.mofa.go.kr/
- Embassy of the Republic of Korea in the United States, visas: https://overseas.mofa.go.kr/us-en/brd/m_4500/list.do
- Embassy of the Republic of Korea in India, visa information: https://overseas.mofa.go.kr/in-en/brd/m_22091/list.do
- Embassy of the Republic of Korea in the Philippines, visa information: https://overseas.mofa.go.kr/ph-en/brd/m_3273/list.do
- Korea Immigration Service / Ministry of Justice policy access via Hi Korea civil service pages: https://www.hikorea.go.kr/main.pt
- Korea Visa Navigator / visa eligibility and forms via Visa Portal: https://www.visa.go.kr/openPage.do?MENU_ID=10101
- Immigration Control Act information via Korean law portal (official government legal source): https://www.law.go.kr/
Warning: Embassy-specific document lists often differ. Always use the page for the exact Korean embassy or consulate responsible for your place of application.
37. Final verdict
The South Korea D-4-6 General Trainee (Private Institute) visa is best for people whose main and genuine purpose is non-degree training at an eligible private institute in Korea.
Biggest benefits
- lawful long-stay training status
- possibility of extension
- a useful stepping-stone into later study pathways
Biggest risks
- unclear public rules for some subcategory details
- embassy-specific document differences
- strict limits on work and off-purpose activity
- refusal risk if your finances or training purpose are not convincing
Best preparation advice
- confirm that your institute truly supports D-4-6
- use the exact checklist from your embassy/consulate
- present stable financial evidence
- keep your purpose clear and narrow
- do not assume work rights
When to consider another visa
Choose another route if your real purpose is: – degree study: likely D-2 – university Korean language study: likely another D-4 stream – employment: work visa/status – short tourism or meetings: short-stay visitor route
Information gaps or items to verify before applying
- Whether your exact private institute qualifies for D-4-6 sponsorship
- Whether your embassy publishes a separate D-4-6 checklist or only general D-4 guidance
- Current visa fee for your nationality and entry type
- Whether your case requires a visa issuance number before consular submission
- Whether part-time work permission exists for your exact D-4-6 circumstances
- Whether dependents can accompany you in practice under current rules
- Whether police certificates or medical/TB checks are required for your nationality
- Whether apostille or consular legalization is required for your education/civil documents
- Current registration timeline and Residence Card procedure after arrival
- Whether multiple entry is available or if re-entry procedures have changed
- Whether any recent immigration policy updates affect D-4 subcategories, attendance rules, or extensions